flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

The 100 tallest buildings ever conventionally demolished

High-rise Construction

The 100 tallest buildings ever conventionally demolished

The list comes from a recent CTBUH study.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | May 18, 2018
Tallest Demolished Buildings

Courtesy CTBUH

What goes up, must come down. And, when it comes to tall buildings, often times the reason they come down is so a taller building can rise from the rubble, at least according to a new study from the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH). It is the concrete jungle’s version of the circle of life.

The recently released study, entitled Tallest Demolished Buildings, examines the 100 tallest buildings in history to have been dismantled by their owners, and some of the reasons for doing so.

The Singer Building in New York City is currently the tallest building ever conventionally demolished. The building stood 187 meters and 41 stories tall and was torn down in 1968 to make room for One Liberty Plaza. The 171-meter-tall CPF Building in Singapore and the 160-meter-tall Morrison Hotel in Chicago round out the top three.

Most of the world’s 100 tallest demolished buildings were torn down in order to build even taller high-rises. The average lifespan of the 100 tallest demolished buildings is only 41 years.

However, despite the possibility of the demolition of 270 Park Avenue in New York, which would become the first building over 200 meters to ever be conventionally demolished, you shouldn’t expect to see taller and taller buildings being demolished after just 41 years anytime soon.

 

270 park Avenue in new YorkPhoto: Marshall Gerometta.

 

“There are currently more than 1,300 buildings of over 200 meters in height around the globe, and counting. Considering the tallest demolished building to date was only 187 meters tall, there’s really no precedent for tearing down 200- meter-plus towers, “said CTBUH Executive Director Antony Wood in a release. “We should perhaps thus be thinking of tall buildings as perpetual entities with lifecycles potentially exceeding 100 or 200 years, while designing them in such a way that they can be creatively adapted for potential future uses.”

The United States accounts for 53% of the world’s 100 tallest demolished buildings. More than a quarter of the 100 tallest demolished buildings were built between 1890 and 1920. High-rises built in the 1970s accounted for 24%.

 

demolished buildings

 

Top 10 tallest conventionally demolished buildings:

Singer Building, New York City, 187 m

CPF Building, Singapore, 171 m

Morrison Hotel, Chicago, 160 m

Deutsche Bank, New York City, 158 m

UIC Building, Singapore, 152 m

One Meridian Plaza, Philadelphia, 150 m

Menara Tun Razak, Kuala Lumpur, 150 m

City Investing Building, New York City, 148 m

The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong, 142 m

Grand Prince Hotel Akasaka, Tokyo, 141 m

Related Stories

High-rise Construction | Nov 1, 2016

Winthrop Square will give rise to Boston’s second tallest building

The building will become the tallest residential tower in the city.

Building Team | Oct 31, 2016

The world’s 100 tallest buildings: Who owns and has developed the most?

All but four owners/developers on the list are located in the United Arab Emirates, China, or Hong Kong.

High-rise Construction | Oct 28, 2016

The world’s 100 tallest buildings: Which contractors have worked on the most?

Only one firm has worked on more than 10 of the world’s 100 tallest buildings.

High-rise Construction | Oct 27, 2016

The world’s 100 tallest buildings: Which MEP engineers have worked on the most?

The top firm worked on over three times as many of the tallest buildings as the second place firm on the list.

High-rise Construction | Oct 26, 2016

The world’s 100 tallest buildings: Which structural engineers have worked on the most?

The top firm has worked on almost one-fifth of the 100 tallest buildings in the world.

High-rise Construction | Oct 25, 2016

That sinking feeling: Millennium Tower San Francisco is beginning to worry residents with its sinking, leaning [Updated]

Residents are beginning to question if the tower, which exists in a major earthquake fault zone, is safe.

High-rise Construction | Oct 21, 2016

The world’s 100 tallest buildings: Which architects have designed the most?

Two firms stand well above the others when it comes to the number of tall buildings they have designed.

High-rise Construction | Oct 14, 2016

Perkins+Will-designed residential towers would transform the Seattle skyline

The towers thrive on ‘creative tension’ and lean farther away from each other the higher they climb.

Wood | Oct 13, 2016

Concept from Perkins+Will could become the world’s tallest timber tower

River Beech Tower is said to be a part of a masterplan along the Chicago River.

Resiliency | Oct 5, 2016

San Francisco’s 181 Fremont will become the most earthquake-resilient building on the West Coast

The building has achieved REDi Gold Rating, resilience-based design guidelines developed by Arup that establish a new benchmark for seismic construction.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021